Transcript Slide 1

Impact of Adverse Events Following
Immunization
On Immunization Programmes
Strategic Communication Workshop
Public Trust and Adverse Events Following
Immunization
Delhi, August 9-10, 2004
Dr Anne Golaz
Regional Advisor, Immunization
UNICEF Regional Office for South Asia
Kathmandu
Impact?
• Any documented impact of real AEFI or rumors of
AEFI, on coverage, disease incidence, national
vaccine policies?
• Impact of AEFI reported mostly from industrialized
countries, very little written from developing countries
• Few documented examples from Europe and Africa,
found in medical journals, and UN publications
• After this presentation, examples from South Asian
countries: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan
Nigeria, KANO state immunization boycott:
International impact on polio eradication
August, 2003: OPV immunization halted in Kano
state, Northern Nigeria, after rumors circulated by
hardline religious clerics stating that:
“OPV vaccine could cause sterility in girls”
Nigeria: Kano state: from local to international impact
Soon after boycott started, Kano became epicenter of big and fast growing
outbreak of polio, spread to whole country: 83% global cases from Nigeria
then to neighboring countries, including 10 that previously had been free of
polio
Wild virus type 1
Wild virus type 3
Endemic countries
Importations
Polio cases as of June 15, 2004
Polio spread from Kano, to
10 countries:
- Ivory Coast
- Ghana
- Togo
- Benin
- Burkina Faso
- Cameroon
- Central African Republic
- Chad
- Sudan
- Botswana
Long-term impact of Kano boycott?
• July, 2004: 11-month ban on OPV lifted: campaign restarted
• Small fraction of hardliners in local government councils still not
accept the vaccine because “governor succumbed to pressure
of the federal government”
• Controversy over safety of polio vaccine generated rejection of
all vaccines: could potentially threatened the acceptance of
other beneficial health programs
• African countries with imported virus risk resurgence of disease
as routine OPV3 <50%
• Conspiracy theories spread to other Islamic states: Pakistan and
Afghanistan
Local impact:
DPT3 and NID OPV reported coverage, 1997
by Province, KENYA
DTP3
OPV
es
t
W
N
ya
nz
R
a
ift
va
lle
y
ea
st
N
or
th
Ea
st
100
80
60
40
20
0
N
ai
ro
bi
C
en
tr
al
C
oa
st
Coverage %
Combatting Anti-vaccination Rumours:
Lessons Learned from Case Studies in East Africa UNICEF Publication 2002
- Central province: educated population: highest routine coverage
- Lowest NID OPV coverage, why?:
1) Militant Catholic bishop led campaign against OPV: spread rumors about OPV
associated with devil worship (color of OPV red, snake on the WHO logo)
2) Home to the political opposition; political atmosphere bred fear and distrust: since
government never gave anything to people of the Central province, why OPV?
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
NID dates changed, coinciding
with malaria peak season
19
89
19
90
19
91
19
92
19
93
19
94
19
95
19
96
19
97
19
98
19
99
20
00
Coverage %
Mbarara district, UGANDA
DTP3 reported coverage, 1989-2000
Fears created by the deaths from malaria right after children received OPV
in 1997, led to association of child deaths with NID season, and routine
vaccination. Temporal association became a causal association in the mind of
many
UGANDA: NIDs 1997-1999
Reported OPV coverage
Anti-OPV radio broadcast #1
Anti-OPV radio broadcast #2
100
Coverage %
98
96
94
92
90
88
1996
1997
1998
R1
1999
2000
R2
Difference? In 1999, rumors broadcast made little impact: officials
had a plan of action to counter rumors and educate people about
immunization starting at the community level
Jordan: AEFI outbreak, 1998
Small cluster of events: major national impact
• September 1998: during annual nationwide school-based Td campaign:
>800 teenagers believed they had suffered from side-effects of Td
vaccine administered at school; 122 admitted at hospitals
• Schools were told to stop using the vaccine: event had started in 1
school, with a few affected students, and led to the interruption of the
school-based immunization program in Jordan!
• Information spread outside school: TV and radio appeared on scene
and rapidly disseminated story throughout country: parents panicked
• Investigation established that for a vast majority, symptoms did not
result from vaccine, but mass psychogenic illness (“hysteria”), only ten
cases true AEFI: rate AEFI found within the expected range of AEFI for
Td
• After the investigation, the Jordanian Ministry of Health reinstated the
Td vaccine and restored the public health confidence in immunization
programme
• S Kharabsheh et al. Mass psychogenic illness following tetanus-diphtheria toxoid vaccination in Jordan.
WHO Bulletin, 2001, 79(8);764-70.
Jordan: Context/background very
important
• Number of negative rumors circulating about immunization at
the time = background of suspicion
• Before outbreak of AEFI, strong anti-government feeling related
to public water: debate just before on contamination of water
detrimental to children’s health
• When press reported students hospitalized, “bad vaccine given
by the government to our children” = government was to blame
yet again
VACCINE REACTIONS
• Local Reactions
• Systemic Reactions
• Allergic Reactions
• Emotional
Jordan: Mixture of genuine
mild side-effects from Td
vaccine and psychologicallyinduced effects
Jordan: lessons learned
• Immunization campaign: large number of doses given
over short period of time: more AEFI seem to occur
• Actual AEFI rate remains within expected range,
sheer numbers involved during that period can
produce clustering effect
• Relationship with media cannot be built up quickly
during a crisis: long-term investments: provide the
media with a continuous flow of information
• Rapid and clear response called for in a crisis
• AEFI surveillance system needed
Pertussis vaccination in Europe: Impact
anti-vaccine movements in 1970-80s
• Sustained use of DTP
• Low pertussis incidence
Hungary
Poland
East Germany
USA
Efficacy whole-cell pertussis
vaccine! Vaccination controls
pertussis!
Decreasing coverage
• Pertussis incidence increasing
•
Sweden
Japan
UK
Italy
West Germany
Anti-vaccine movements!
UK: 1974 report on 36 neurological
reactions to pertussis vaccine
Gangarosa E. et al. Impact of anti-vaccine movements on pertussis control: the untold story. Lancet, vol 351, January
31,1998
Incidence of pertussis in countries affected by
active anti-vaccine movements - England and Wales
Active antivaccine lobby
DTP introduced
500
400
81%
81%
93%
Incidence per 100,000
300
Vaccine
uptake
200
31%
100
0
1940
1940
1950
1960
1950
1960
1970
1970
Year
1980
1980
1990
1990
Year
Gangarosa E. et al. Impact of anti-vaccine movements on pertussis control: the untold story.
Lancet, vol 351, January 31,1998
Sweden: impact on national policies
• Pertussis vaccination started in 1950s
• In 1967, influential medical leader: pertussis milder disease
because of social, medical progress: questioned need for
vaccine
• By 1975, pediatricians lost confidence in pertussis vaccine:
cases occurred in vaccinated children and some
neurological events were blamed on the vaccine
•  DTP coverage decreased from 90% in 1974 to 12% in
1979
• 1979: National policy change: abandon pertussis vaccine
• 1980s: Sweden reported > 10’000 case /year; >100/100’000
Sweden
Whole-cell pertussi vaccine coverage
substantially decreased
1940
55
70
85
Sweden and Norway
National policy changed
DPT not recommended
Gangarosa et al., Lancet
 DTP coverage fell from 80% in 1974 to 10% in 1976
 Pertussis epidemic occurred in 1979 with > 13’000 cases/ 41 deaths, +
complications (pneumonia, encephalopathy, seizures)
Current vaccine scares: Potential
threats to national and international
immunization programs
UK: MMR and autism
• 1997, considerable national media interest in possible adverse
effects of MMR
• In Wales, MMR uptake declined 14% in the distribution area of a
local newspaper covering MMR story aggressively, as compared
to 2.4% decline in other areas of Wales
• In 3 months, local paper had published 5 front page headline
articles, 3 opinions, 18 other articles on MMR
B. Mason et al. Impact of a local newspaper campaign on the uptake of MMR vaccine. J
Epidemiol Community Health, 200; 54:473-74 Dec;20(4):1099-106
MMR and autism: Lessons learned
• Most people learn about medicine and science from newspaper,
magazine stories, radio, TV programmes and the internet
• Most parents trust health care providers: in Attitudes,
Knowledge and Practice survey of physicians in Italy: most
important factor in decision of parents to vaccinate
• Health care workers must be trained to be well informed of both
benefits of immunization as well as issues of parental concern
regarding vaccine safety
• Engage the news media, train health care workers!
Impact of AEFI
Summary: lessons learned
• Local impact  national  international
• To build public trust in vaccine:
• Importance of media and health care providers in giving correct
information about vaccine
• Importance of background of trust: lack of information, religious
opposition, distrust of central government on other issues
(poverty and marginalisation of underserved population at the
root of popular disgruntlement: refusal of vaccine)
• Importance AEFI surveillance for monitoring of immunization
safety
Evolution of Immunization Programs and
Prominence of Vaccine Safety
2
1
Prevaccine Increasing
Coverage
5
4
3
Loss of
Resumption of
Confidence Confidence
Vaccinations
Stopped
Disease
Incidence
Vaccine
Coverage
Outbreak
Adverse
Events
a
Eradication
b
Maturity
Eradication
Conclusions
• Take AEFI seriously: they can have serious impact
on immunization programmes
• Paradox: successful disease-control encourages
complacency; as VPD become rarer, attention shift
from disease to adverse events: set the stage for
movements opposed to vaccination
• Loss of confidence  resurgence of disease
Thank you!